by Bob Sopchick. Game News now sold for $1 per copy. Columnist Linda Steiner was well into Another View's near 30-year run, while Marcia Bonta was in the second year of writing her continuing column, The Naturalist's Eye. From its new headquarters building on Elmerton Avenue, the agency diversified with limited staff across a broadening frontier that covered 480 species of wild birds and mammals and more than a million acres of state game lands. Then, technology stormed in and Bob Sopchick was a staple among cover artists and was well known for his deer illustrations. 8 began replacing decades-old routine ways of managing wildlife and information. Computers replaced typewriters and were integrated into daily operations. Email reduced the need for and significance of postal mail and telephone calls. The agency's new website - started in 1997 - quickly evolved into a clearinghouse for wildlife and agency information. Even Game News embraced technology moving to desktop publishing in the early 1990s. It would become a full-color magazine in 2005. Technology also would move wildlife management forward at a brisker pace. Radio telemetry - even satellite telemetry - helped biologists build on their knowledge of wildlife migration, habitat preferences and home-range particulars. Laptop computers replaced notebooks. Cellphones became more useful than radios. Video cassettes helped the Game Commission teach the public about bear management - and later deer and elk - in a more convenient and affordable way. The 1990s also were a decade of change for whitetail management in the Commonwealth, and Game News published scores of features and articles to help hunters understand why those changes were occurring. The changes included adding two more weeks of hunting to the four-week archery deer season; the use of bonus antlerless deer licenses, which allowed a properly licensed hunter to harvest more than one deer a year; switching deer harvest statistics from a count of report cards submitted to the agency to a computed figure that factored in reporting rates; a requirement for all